hmmm. Why have they got red lines in london along the side of the road, shouldn't they be yellow?
Quite trafficky towards 2/3 of the way through!
are your shoes specialized by the way? look similar to mine.

LOL! I think I at most expressed a little discomfort with your overtake, and in fairness the same applies to my own overtake there. It comes back to the whole I'm being a bit too pushy at the moment as per the topic on commuting. I'm sitting between 22-34mph along most of that section.

hmmm. Why have they got red lines in london along the side of the road, shouldn't they be yellow?
Quite trafficky towards 2/3 of the way through!
are your shoes specialized by the way? look similar to mine.

Click to expand...

Primary routes in London are called Red Routes, and they have different rules as regards stopping and parking.

Unless you're in a black cab, when you are encouraged to stop wherever you like, followed by a U-turn........

Bus on red route The red route is a network of 580km of London's roads, which carry 35 per cent of the city's traffic. Free-flowing traffic on these roads is essential to keep London moving - parking on the red route causes jams and clogs up the system.
Red route parking

Roads on the red route have stopping and parking restrictions in place.

You can identify them by red no-stopping lines and road signs indicating when parking, stopping, loading or unloading is allowed.

TfL is responsible for traffic enforcement along the route, using a combination of traffic wardens, community support officers and an extensive network of CCTV cameras.

Hmmm interesting. Some of your going down the outside looked a little risque but it's difficult to tell from a camera shot, I daresay you'd eyeballed those drivers half way across the jct and were sure they weren't going to cross in front of you.

Were you in the middle of the road going through the section with the little centre islands?